ab

"anthony"

11/12/2005 10:47 PM

advice needed on homemade air filtration unit

Hi all, I need help/advice...

I just got an old furnace blower assembly with a 990 rpm 240 v motor. I
want to build an air filter unit.

The squirrel cage is 12" X 12" and I just hooked up a 1745rpm 115v motor.
The original motor was rated at 990rpm. Is the new motor going to give me
better result by spinning the squirrel cage virtually 2X faster? I was
wondering if I could get away with a unit having filters on three sides?

Is there any sites on the web that show IN Depth, CLOSE UP photos on how to
construct a unit?

thanks for any suggestions/help

Anthony


This topic has 5 replies

p

in reply to "anthony" on 11/12/2005 10:47 PM

12/12/2005 9:26 AM

We did the following for brazing fumes but much of the expertise these
companies supply will be applicable to your use. I don't have any
connection with any of these and, when we did this, the information was
free.

Tom

Air Filtering Equipment

Equipment Choices
You can start as I did with a simple fan and a metal stovepipe. This
is very easy and cheap to install. The drawback is that it usually
sucks a lot of warm air out during cold weather.

Consultants
Most states provide free consulting. If you are in British Columbia
then you can contact the Workers' Compensation Board at (604)
276-3209.

Three Excellent Articles

1. One is by John Ashe of AAF (American Air Filter) International in
Louisville, KY. (305) 443-9353. His article is Controlling Welding
Fumes in the July, 1997 issue of The Fabricator. Reprints of the
article are available by calling (800) 477-1214 and asking for reprint
# APC-4-905.

2. Another good article was in the December 1996 issue of the same
magazine. It was written by Joe Topmiller who is Director of Technical
support for United Air Specialists at (800) 551-5401 in Cincinnati,
Ohio. The article is Addressing Air Quality Issues in the Workplace.

3. The third article is on new respiratory standards by Jay G. Mears in
Modern Woodworking. (248) 244-6439. It was called: Intelligence
Report: Getting Ready for 42 CFR part 84 call MSA and is available at
(888) 867-0602.

Equipment Suppliers:

1. AAF International (American Air Filters) -(305) 443-9353 -
small line but appropriate for most shop applications - great
technical support - (see articles section above). Excellent
technical advice.

2. Abicor Binzel (301) 846-4196 Frederick, MD - They only supply fume
extraction guns for welding. Great product if you need it.

3. Airflow Systems (214) 503-8008 Dallas, TX - wide variety of
units, overhead units, downdraft tables, and portable units - "Dust
and fume Exhaust" pamphlet has good technical information.
Recommended for literature.

4. Coppus (508) 756-8391 Millbury, MA - unique, portable dust
collection systems - also employee coolers for hot areas. Unique
products.

5. Dust Vent, Inc. (630) 543-9007 Addison, IL. - Wide range of
equipment and good literature. Recommended for literature.

6. Eurovac (905) 850-9828 in Ontario. -Central vacuum cleaner
systems and other dust collection equipment.

7. Farr Pollution Control Products (800) 479-6801 Los Angeles, CA. -
Overhead cleaning with or without arms.

8. Gardner Environmental Products (414) 485-4303 Horicon, WI
-Ceiling mounted and portable units.

9. Industrial Ventilation Group (800) 610-6010 Harbor Springs, MI
-Central and portable units, downdraft tables. Recommended for
literature.

10. Lincoln Electric (216) 481-8100 -Offers a central collection
system and portable units -just one mention in their catalog.

11. MAC Equipment, Inc. (800) 821-2476 - Huge, complete catalog.
Excellent information, great source to build your own system.
Recommended for literature.

12. Nederman (313) 729-3344 Westland, MI -Nice literature -looks
like nice overhead arm extraction equipment -good information on Do
It Yourself. Recommended for literature.

13. Plymovent (732) 417-0808 New Jersey -good equipment -great
free booklet "My Pocketguide to Clean Fresh Air". Recommended for
literature.

14. Sly, Inc. (216) 891-3200 Cleveland, OH -Shop size central
collection systems to huge industrial systems. Recommended for
literature.

15. Trion (800) 421-3956 Greensboro, NC -Overhead units -they
advertise a free clean air guide.

16. United Air Specialists (800) 551-5401 Cincinnati, Ohio -Invented
the original smoke eaters for bars, etc. -Good equipment -good
literature and great technical help. Recommended for literature.

GO

"Greg O"

in reply to "anthony" on 11/12/2005 10:47 PM

11/12/2005 10:32 PM

"anthony" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi all, I need help/advice...
>
> I just got an old furnace blower assembly with a 990 rpm 240 v motor. I
> want to build an air filter unit.
>
> The squirrel cage is 12" X 12" and I just hooked up a 1745rpm 115v motor.
> The original motor was rated at 990rpm. Is the new motor going to give me
> better result by spinning the squirrel cage virtually 2X faster? I was
> wondering if I could get away with a unit having filters on three sides?
>
> Is there any sites on the web that show IN Depth, CLOSE UP photos on how
> to construct a unit?
>
> thanks for any suggestions/help
>
> Anthony
>
What is the HP of the 115 volt motor? Twice the RPM will require
approximately 4 times the HP!!
I don't think its gonna work!


--
PoorUB
'05 Ultra Classic

ab

"anthony"

in reply to "anthony" on 11/12/2005 10:47 PM

12/12/2005 1:38 AM

thanks Dan!

"Dan Kratville" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> anthony wrote:
>> Hi all, I need help/advice...
>>
>> I just got an old furnace blower assembly with a 990 rpm 240 v motor. I
>> want to build an air filter unit.
>>
>> The squirrel cage is 12" X 12" and I just hooked up a 1745rpm 115v motor.
>> The original motor was rated at 990rpm. Is the new motor going to give
>> me better result by spinning the squirrel cage virtually 2X faster? I
>> was wondering if I could get away with a unit having filters on three
>> sides?
>>
>> Is there any sites on the web that show IN Depth, CLOSE UP photos on how
>> to construct a unit?
>>
>> thanks for any suggestions/help
>>
>> Anthony
> This isn't very closeup or in depth but I was planning on trying to build
> this unit with a a squirrel cage blower myself.
> Dan
>
> http://wood.bigelowsite.com/air_filter/

DK

Dan Kratville

in reply to "anthony" on 11/12/2005 10:47 PM

11/12/2005 8:15 PM

anthony wrote:
> Hi all, I need help/advice...
>
> I just got an old furnace blower assembly with a 990 rpm 240 v motor. I
> want to build an air filter unit.
>
> The squirrel cage is 12" X 12" and I just hooked up a 1745rpm 115v motor.
> The original motor was rated at 990rpm. Is the new motor going to give me
> better result by spinning the squirrel cage virtually 2X faster? I was
> wondering if I could get away with a unit having filters on three sides?
>
> Is there any sites on the web that show IN Depth, CLOSE UP photos on how to
> construct a unit?
>
> thanks for any suggestions/help
>
> Anthony
>
>
This isn't very closeup or in depth but I was planning on trying to
build this unit with a a squirrel cage blower myself.
Dan

http://wood.bigelowsite.com/air_filter/

ab

"anthony"

in reply to "anthony" on 11/12/2005 10:47 PM

12/12/2005 1:38 AM

it's a 1/3 HP motor... I plugged it in, and it runs real smooth, but when
I put a paper towel close to the sides, well, let's just say that I wasn't
too impressed with the drawing power of the fan...

if any one can help, it's you guys/gals on this board!


"Greg O" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> "anthony" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> Hi all, I need help/advice...
>>
>> I just got an old furnace blower assembly with a 990 rpm 240 v motor. I
>> want to build an air filter unit.
>>
>> The squirrel cage is 12" X 12" and I just hooked up a 1745rpm 115v motor.
>> The original motor was rated at 990rpm. Is the new motor going to give
>> me better result by spinning the squirrel cage virtually 2X faster? I
>> was wondering if I could get away with a unit having filters on three
>> sides?
>>
>> Is there any sites on the web that show IN Depth, CLOSE UP photos on how
>> to construct a unit?
>>
>> thanks for any suggestions/help
>>
>> Anthony
>>
> What is the HP of the 115 volt motor? Twice the RPM will require
> approximately 4 times the HP!!
> I don't think its gonna work!
>
>
> --
> PoorUB
> '05 Ultra Classic
>


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